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An eight-year-old stallion bucks all the trends to win the 2023 Al Shira'aa Derby - Victoria Goff sat down with winning rider David Simpson to discuss his first ever Derby title
Over the years, certain trends have emerged in the Hickstead Derby. Winning horses tend to be older, or at least more established in their careers. Nearly all have jumped round the Derby course at least once before returning to win. Repeat victories aren’t uncommon – once a horse and rider have proved themselves round the challenging Derby course, they have a good chance of doing it again. In the six decades since the class first took place, nearly every winner has been a gelding.
But the results of the 61st Al Shira’aa Derby took this formbook and thoroughly ripped it up. David Simpson’s winning horse was young, at just eight years old, by far the youngest victor of the Derby in decades. He was a stallion, making him only the third entire to win the class. And most impressive of all, he was making his Derby debut.
But there’s something special about the 2023 champion, Pjotr Van De Kruishoeve – known as ‘Freddie’ in the stable. While you might not have placed a bet on him winning last year, there was plenty of evidence to suggest that here was a Derby champion in waiting. He’s a horse who evidently loves Hickstead, having already won the 7yo Championship at the Royal International. He’d had his first test over Hickstead’s fences in the ClipMyHorse.TV Derby Tankard, where he’d jumped double clear for second place, plus a decent run in Friday’s Derby Trial, where they’d had an unlucky two fences to finish in the top 10. And despite his relative youth and inexperience, he was already a Grand Prix winner, with all the scope and ability in the world.
Then there’s his rider, whose Hickstead credentials cannot be questioned. A double winner of the Queen Elizabeth II Cup, a winner of the Derby Trial, a runner-up in the British Speed Derby, and with several top 10 placings to his name in the Derby itself. David spent years working as part of the Breen Equestrian team, so has always felt very much at home at Hickstead. These days he is based at a beautiful yard in Coolham in West Sussex, just 20min from the showground. Such is David’s passion for the Derby, he knows every inch of the course, and has even built replica Derby fences in a grass paddock at home.
“It was a class I had to win, because I've always been obsessed with it,” says David. “The course is ingrained in my memory, I could ride it with my eyes closed. But there’s one thing knowing it, to actually go in and nail it with a clear round, to implement everything you want to, that’s the hard part.”
Watching the Derby each year was a big part of David’s childhood growing up in Ireland. “I remember being about 12 or 13 and every July, the front cover of the Irish monthly showjumping bulletin was always Peter Charles and Corrada winning the Derby,” says David. “I would always sit down with my mum and dad every year to watch the class on the BBC, my Granny would come up to watch it too, and it was such a big thing for us as a family.”
His parents were both keen amateur showjumpers, and David and his three younger brothers all learned to ride out hunting with the Donegal Harriers, meaning the natural obstacles, banks and ditches of the International Arena come somewhat naturally to him. Having got to know Irish showjumper Peter Smyth on the hunting field, nine-year-old David was asked to ride some ponies for him, which was his first introduction to the sport. He immediately loved competing and it began taking up every weekend and school holiday, but his Dad (a chemical engineer turned property developer), and his Mum (a doctor) were keen for him to finish his studies first. David did just that, doing well enough in his exams to gain a place at Nottingham to study Veterinary Science.
By that time, David’s father had begun investing in a few horses with Shane Breen, and an idea was mooted that David could come over to the UK to work at Breen Equestrian for a few months, while Shane was short of a work rider. It was an agreement that was to last seven years. “Me and Shane had a really good relationship straight away,” David adds. “In that first year, I did my first Senior Nations Cup at 18, and won my first Grand Prix. At that point, I sat down with Shane and my Dad and had the conversation, and at that point we decided I’d go for showjumping over veterinary.”
When Shane, the Al Shira’aa Derby winner in 2022, was asked about the standout riders that he’d had through the ranks of Breen Equestrian, the first name he mentioned was Simpson. Meanwhile, David cites his father and Shane as the biggest influences in his life. “I’ve a lot to thank both of them for, and they're actually very similar – they taught me that hard work gets you rewards, and they both instilled that into me. The whole experience of being at Breen Equestrian taught me everything I know.”
While it proved to be an excellent move for David’s career, it was still a nerve-wracking decision to leave his native Ireland to move to the home of British showjumping. “I was only 17, and it was a big move, but Sue Bunn made it so easy for me – it was instantly like being at home and being part of the family. Lucy Bunn (now Townley) was at Shane’s then too, and she became like a sister to me straight away.”
Simpson made his Derby debut in 2010, riding Rolo Tomasi, where he finished on a credible 12 faults. Three years later, the pair were fourth on eight faults, which until last year was David’s best Hickstead Derby result. “He used to just close his eyes and go – my biggest challenge was getting him stopped on top of the Bank,” he recalls. In 2014, he finished seventh on the grey mare Richi Rich III, and ninth with Hermoine IV, citing the latter as giving him the best spin round the Derby course until, of course, last summer.
Hickstead’s iconic June fixture is David’s favourite show of the year, and last year’s Derby win has cemented its position. “I’ve always wanted to win it, since I was about eight years old, and was watching riders like John Ledingham, and Michael and John Whitaker, and Nick Skelton. For some, it might not be as big a deal as the Dublin or Aachen Grand Prix, but for me it’s my favourite show because there’s so much prestige and history behind it. It’s a course that tests horsemanship – your horse has to be really well trained to be able to deal with the atmosphere, and be able to maintain focus for the whole class. You have to have that extra level of fitness, and know the points in the course where you can give them a breather and where you need to make them really switch on.”
He gave a textbook example of this last summer when steering his Derby debutant to a brilliant clear round. It was an extraordinary renewal of the class, with four-time Derby champion William Funnell looking like he was about to land a record fifth win, after delivering an unprecedented two clear rounds with Equine America Billy Diamo and Dublon, something that no rider had ever achieved before.
When Equine America Billy Diamo knocked four fences down in the jump-off, in all likelihood tired from the warm weather and the lengthy first round clear, William had raised his hand to signify his retiral. But his second ride Dublon just had one part of the Devil’s Dyke down to finish on four faults, in a time of 91.68sec, giving last-to-go David very little margin for error. The crowd held their breath when Pjotr knocked the Derby Rails, but they continued with no further faults and flew over the last huge oxer to go just 1.2sec faster that Funnell, and take the win.
The crowds witnessed an unforgettable celebration when Pjotr crossed the finish line and David looked up at the big screen to see confirmation of the win. His hat went flying, he gave a punch of the air, and a look of total delight swept across the Irish rider’s face. Months later, he still remembers how he felt at that moment. “I just felt pure elation. It’s achieving a lifelong dream, like a football player winning their first FA Cup or a tennis player winning Wimbledon. To be honest, I was delighted to jump a clear round, but to win it was indescribable – ecstatic, every emotion piled into one.”
The three-way jump-off had provided one of the best finishes in Derby history, and David is quick to pay tribute to his rival that day. “After Shane and my Dad, I would say William is the next biggest influence for me,” he says. “When I left Shane’s and set up my own yard, William started giving me a few pointers, and when he broke his leg I rode Billy Picador and Diamo for him, and that brought my riding on another level. Shane made me the rider I am, and Will now helps me fine tune that.”
After his stint working with Shane, Simpson had left the security of being at Breen Equestrian to set up in business with fellow showjumper Louise Pavitt, determined to prove that they could make a success of it – even though it wasn’t long after the birth of their first son. They initially moved from Shane’s yard to Sue and Lizzie Bunn’s Stuccles Farm, a mile down the road. “Lizzie and Sue really gave us that perfect opportunity. We had 15 boxes and we literally started with four horses and built it up from there,” he explains.
When Bridgehill Farm came on the market a few years later, they bought it – thanks to some extra help from David’s father. “We put every penny we had into getting this place. There was no sand arena, the house was rack and ruin. When we first moved in, we had a mobile home that me, Louise and our two kids lived in, and we literally would ride in the morning and then all afternoon, we would be pressure washing, tidying, building things.”
Fellow Breen Equestrian graduate Derek McCoppin was based at Bridgehill Farm in the early days, and together he and David shared a fascination with the Derby. “We got a loan of some diggers from neighbours and we planned out the grass Derby course. One evening, we drove over to Hickstead a bit of paper and a tape measure, and measured out the course. Literally piece by piece, the two of us grafted to put the Derby field together.”
It's been a huge asset to the team, not just in terms of preparing for the Derby, but for producing their young horses – giving them more experience of jumping on grass, and learning to pop over natural fences such as logs, hedges and ditches. It was this Derby training course, according to David, that made it possible to win the Al Shira’aa Derby with an eight-year -old.
But as we mentioned before, Pjotr isn’t your average eight-year-old. David knew he was special from the offset. “We wanted to stock up on a few younger horses, so we went to see Karel Cox in Belgium, where we’ve bought a lot of horses through the years. We were in an old-fashioned indoor arena, and the door wouldn't close properly, so there was a crack of light behind the jump. Every time Freddie jumped the little fence, he would jump the bit of light on the ground. And I said to Karel, I am definitely buying that horse.”
Back in the UK, Freddie was quick to impress. “He had just an amazing brain, just so trainable. He was attentive to everything. We broke him as a three-year-old, and you only ever had to do something once with him – the minute you educated him to something it was like he had a supercomputer installed.” The same applied when he was introduced to David’s replica Derby course. “From day one, the minute I started jumping those fences at home, he absolutely loved it and just took to it straight away.”
Louise competed the stallion in his early years, and she was in the saddle when Freddie won the 7yo class in 2022. But there was never any argument about who would keep the ride. “Louise always gets first choice!” he jokes. “Louise likes bigger types like Don VHP, while I like finer blood horses – even though I'm 6ft 4in, and Louise is 5ft 7in! Pjotr actually falls perfectly in between, he's a lovely big rangy horse to ride, which Louise loves, but he has loads of blood too, which I love. To be honest, we train together and work together every day, so can swap and change, depending on our show plans and what horses we have at the time.”
While the Derby is David’s favourite class, it doesn’t hold quite the same appeal to Louise. “When it comes to the Derby, I can’t wait for the bell to go to get started, and Louise can’t wait to cross the finish so it’s over!” he says. For someone who genuinely loves competing in the Derby, there could have been few more enjoyable feelings than cantering round clear last year, on a horse who relishes jumping the sort of natural obstacles that Hickstead is renowned for. “He was riding brilliantly, he was perfectly fit, so I was able to just enjoy jumping around the course,” David adds.
But he is quick to point out that Pjotr is a championship horse in the making, and far from a Derby specialist. He’s got a big canter and is very quick, so is adept in smaller sand arenas as he is in the huge expanse of the International Arena. He’s scopey and careful, but bold and brave too – the perfect combination. “For a while in top level showjumping, the fences were always so light and finicky, but perhaps they've gone as far as they can with that. Now we're seeing more walls and hedges in course design, so that braveness side is coming back into sport, which I really like – showjumping should be a test of courage of horse and rider. You’re also seeing more top horses in the Derby again, which I love.”
An old-fashioned horseman who grew up hunting, and loves the Derby so much he measured and made his own course – in many ways, David sounds like Hickstead founder Douglas Bunn. The Derby is Douglas’s most famous invention, the iconic class that has inspired so many young riders over the years, including Simpson. He’s already counting down the days to this year’s Al Shira’aa Derby, and having another chance to hold the Boomerang Trophy aloft. “Showjumping needs to be a spectator sport, and the Derby has it all. The kids growing up in Pony Club, the ones who watch the Derby on TV, that’s where a love of showjumping begins.”
This article was first published in June 2024
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